Yale On YES Begins at Columbia

NEW HAVEN, Conn. -- The Yale
football team (3-3, 1-2 Ivy) kicks off the Yale on YES package with
a 1 p.m. game this Saturday against Columbia (2-4, 1-2) at Lawrence
Wien Stadium. The YES Network is found on many cable systems,
DirecTV (631) and Verizon's FiOS service. The Bulldogs-Lions clash
can be heard on WELI (AM-960, 960weli.com) and WYBC (AM-1340,
wybc.com).

COLUMBIA-YALE SERIES

Yale, with a current, seven-game win streak,
holds a commanding lead in the series at 65-18-2. The Elis' .744
winning percentage against the Lions is their highest among Ivy
opponents. The Blue is 34-9-2 at home against the Light Blue, while
Columbia has scored the fewest points against Yale of all Ivy
opponents. The Lions have never won by more than 12 points, while
the Bulldogs have won 47-0 in 1986 and 93-0 (most points ever
allowed by Columbia) in 1883.

THE MATCHUP

Yale's defense, which has given up one TD in the
last three games, faces a Columbia offense that is averaging over
21 points. The Lions' defense, which gives up better than 21 per
game, takes on a Bulldog offense looking for its first offensive
score in eight quarters.

MEMORABLE GAMES

The Lions did not allow Yale to complete a pass
in a 1954 game but still lost 13-7... Columbia blanked a Yale team
in 1961 (11-0) that was coming off an undefeated campaign. It was
the fourth and last shutout of the Bulldogs by the Lions...
Columbia QB Marty Domres, a future NFL QB, threw for 326 yards in
1966 for the Lions in a losing (44-21) effort... Yale QB Pete
Doherty '67 connected on a school-record five TD passes that day...
Yale and NFL great Dick Jauron '73 scampered 87 yards for the
deciding score in a 28-14 win over Columbia in 1972... Ryan LoProto
'02 scored on two interceptions, including one from 67 yards, as
Yale won 41-0 in 2000.

YALE ON YES TEAM

Chris Shearn returns for his second year of
play-by-play work on Yale on YES and is joined again by former
Princeton and NFL lineman Ross Tucker. Former Yale defensive
back Jack Ford '72, a TV broadcaster who has appeared
on all the major networks, joins them in the booth for all
three Yale on YES games this fall.

DEFENSE SHINES IN LOSS AT PENN

Last Saturday's 9-0 loss at Penn was determined
in a span of less than two minutes late in the first quarter with a
field goal and an interception return for a touchdown. On the
series after a 35-yard FG, the Quakers' Jared Sholly intercepted a
short screen pass and returned it 15 yards for a touchdown (failed
on PAT). Penn had more offense (271-163) than the Bulldogs on a
rainy day at Franklin Field, and most of what Yale got came after
sophomore QB Patrick Witt (Wylie, Texas) came off the bench to
complete eight of 15 passes for 82 yards in the fourth quarter.

LIONS SLOWED BY WATER, GREEN

Nick Schwieger rushed for 242 yards and helped
the Green end their 17-game losing streak with a 28-6 win over
Columbia at Hanover. Dartmouth forced three turnovers and never
trailed. The Green had more total offense (354-271). Columbia QB
M.A. Olawale was 12-for-32 for 89 yards with two interceptions
while rushing for a team-high 82 yards. Lions' DB Adam Mehrer led
all players with 16 tackles. WR Austin Knowlin finished with five
grabs for 40 yards, moving him within 95 of Columbia's career
receiving record.

LAST YEAR AT THE BOWL

RB Mike McLeod '09 scored on runs of one, two
and eight yards and his defensive teammates recovered two fumbles
and picked off a pass as Yale beat Columbia 27-12 before 11,870
last year. The Lions had the edge in total offense (316-269) and
first downs (15-14) and cashed in on all three trips to the red
zone, but the Bulldogs made a few big defensive stands and held
onto the ball for all but 2:45 of the fourth quarter. DT Kyle
Hawari '09 had two sacks and two forced fumbles, LB Bobby Abare '09
had a sack and LB Paul Rice intercepted Columbia on its first
offensive play.

DEFENSIVE DOGS

Andrew Samson's FG in the first quarter at Penn
ended Yale's span of 94:01 without allowing a point, dating to the
third quarter of the win over Dartmouth two weeks before. Yale has
not allowed an offensive TD since the win over the Green. The Blue
was able to continue the streak without the services of injured
senior DB Larry Abare (Acton, Mass.). The Yale defense is ranked
No. 1 in FCS scoring defense with an 11.83 mark. The Blue allows
252 total yards per game, which is fifth in the nation. Yale's
rushing defense is 22nd (99.5), its pass defense (92.6) fifth.

TACKLING ELIS

Ten Yale defensive players have double-digit
solo tackles. Fifteen Yalies have combined for 26 total tackles for
lost yardage. Six different Bulldogs have combined for 10 QB sacks
this fall; senior DT Tom McCarthy (Chester, NJ) leads the Blue with
three. Four different Elis, from three classes, have interceptions.
Senior LB Tim Handlon (Valparaiso, Ind.), who leads the Blue with
35 total tackles, junior DB Adam Money (Whiteland, Ind.) and
sophomore DB Drew Baldwin (Alexandria, Va.) have two picks each.
Senior LB Max Newton (Great Meadows, N.J.) intercepted the first
pass of his career at Penn. McCarthy (field goal) and LB Jordan
Haynes (Folsom, Calif.), who got his hand on a Penn punt last week,
have the two Yale blocked kicks.

YALE'S MOST PRODUCTIVE ROOKIE

Chris Smith (Midlothian, Va.), who is Yale's top
punt (3.1) and kick returner (23.3) and is second on the team with
18 catches, is among the top newcomers in the Ivy League this fall.
He led all players with five catches for 56 yards in tough
conditions at Penn. He no longer seems like a freshman after six
games of regular duty. The freshman is fourth in the Ivy among
kickoff return guys, while he ranks fifth in league punt returns.

COACH WILLIAMS

Tom Williams was named the Joel E. Smilow '54
Head Coach of Yale Football last January and came to New Haven
after spending two seasons as an assistant for the NFL's
Jacksonville Jaguars. Williams has 11 seasons of college coaching
experience. He is the 33rd Yale head football coach but just the
third in the last 44 years.

IVY'S FIRST

Saturday's game features the matchup of the Ivy
League's first two black head football coaches. Norries Wilson, 0-3
against Yale, became the first when he took the Columbia job in
2006. Tom Williams followed him into the Ancient Eight last
January. The two coaches have never worked together nor coached
against each other.

WILLIAMS AFTER LAST SATURDAY

"It's a disappointing loss. Penn did a nice job
of making plays. We didn't make enough of them. We played with
great intensity, but that's not enough. All the credit goes to
them."

CATCHING WILLIAMS

Tom Williams takes part in three media events
each week. Williams can be heard Monday nights on WYBC (AM-1340)
from 8 to 8:30 on the Yale Sports Monday Show. The Yale segment of
the weekly Ivy League media teleconference is 11:53 AM on Tuesdays,
while he and some of his players are at the Yale Bookstore every
Tuesday at 2 p.m. for the Dick Galiette Press Conference, which can
be seen a few hours later on sportingnewsct.com.

FIRST-YEAR BLUE

Tom Williams, off to a 3-3 start, begins his
Yale career following a full spectrum of success in debut seasons.
The best debut campaign for a Yale head coach was the first, Walter
Camp (13-0 and National Champs) in 1888. The next 20 coaches
enjoyed comparable success in the early years of the sport.
However, wins for new coaches in the later part of the 20th century
did not come so easily. Two of the five Eli mentors since 1950 had
better than .500 marks, Jordan Olivar (7-2 in 1952) and John Pont
(6-3 in 1963). Herman Hickman went 4-5 in 1948, Carm Cozza was 3-6
in 1965 and Jack Siedlecki was 1-9 in 1997.

3 STARTS EACH

Sophomore Patrick Witt (Wylie, Texas) started
the first three games at QB, while junior QB Brook Hart (State
College, Pa.) has been behind center the last three. Hart, who has
one more TD (5) and one more interception (4) than Witt, provided
great fourth quarter relief in a loss to Lafayette at the Bowl.
Witt, who went 22-for-27 with two TDs at Georgetown, did the same
at Penn last week as the backup. Hart's career-best outing came in
the win over Dartmouth when he completed 28 of 40 passes for 390
yards (6th best at Yale) and three TDs. He started the last five
games of 2008 while establishing a Yale record, 62.1 completion
percentage.

3s, 9s IN YALE-PENN

Last year Penn beat Yale 9-7 at the Bowl with
three Andrew Samson field goals. This year at Penn, Bulldogs' PK/P
Tom Mante missed the mark on three FG attempts in a 9-0 loss.

BULLDOGS DON'T SCARE EASILY

Yale has played 18 games on Halloween and is
12-5-1 overall. The Elis won their first nine on Oct. 31 but have
lost the last two, both at Penn.

ON THE GROUND

Four different Elis have led Yale in rushing
this fall; senior RB Jordan Farrell (Orland Park, Ill.) was the
leader in the first three, while Yale's leading rusher at Penn was
QB Brook Hart (13-24). Farrell leads Yale with 59 runs and 226
yards.

NEWCOMERS MAKING THEIR MARK

It's unusual for a Yale football team to have so
many newcomers making an impact, but it's happening in 2009. Five
members of the class of 2013 are on the two-deep offensive depth
chart, while two are on the defense. A pair of freshmen receivers
have a combined 25 catches in six games, by far the most ever for a
Bulldog squad. To show how significant that offensive production
is, consider Yale's career reception leader Ralph Plumb '05 had two
total catches his freshman season while former NFL player Eric
Johnson '01 caught four balls his rookie year. Allen Harris
(Detroit, Mich.) established a Yale record for catches by a
freshman in a game with five against Dartmouth and has seven this
fall. Chris Smith (Midlothian, Va.) is second on the team with 18
grabs after equaling the Yale record with five grabs at Penn.

THROUGH RAIN

Despite rough conditions the last two Saturdays,
senior P/PK Tom Mante (Westford, Mass.) managed to turn punts over
through the rain at Lehigh and Penn and now leads the Ivy with a
40.2 average. Mante did not fare as well with his field goal
attempts, missing all three at Penn and having one blocked at
Lehigh. He was Ivy League Special Teams Player of the Week two of
the first three weeks of 2009. He tied the Ivy League record with a
54-yard FG against Cornell on Sept. 26, while Mante had a 50-yard
FG at Georgetown the week before. Mante now shares the league long
FG mark with five others, but no kicker had reached from that
distance since 1976. In addition, no Ivy kicker has hit 50-yard
field goals on consecutive Saturdays. Otis Guernsey drop kicked a
54-yarder for the Bulldogs in 1915. Mante, an NFL prospect, also
has punts of 73 and 65 yards and he recovered one of his own
on-side kicks. Mante was an All-Ivy selection at both positions
last fall.

STAFF NOTES

Tom Williams taped an interview from Yale with
CNN last week that will air some time in November as part of the
show "What Matters"... Two Yale assistant coaches spent time last
summer at NFL training camps as intern coaches. Kefense Hynson, who
works with Yale's receivers, was with Oakland. Ikaika Malloe, the
Joel E. Smilow '54 Defensive Coordinator, worked with
Jacksonville... Mike Sanford, the mentor for the Yale TEs and a
former Boise State QB, is the son of UNLV football head coach Mike
Sanford... Student assistant coach Isaiah DeLeon-Mares, who worked
at the Warrick Dunn Foundation, also worked with the Tampa Bay
Buccaneers last summer.

STUDENT COACH

Yale senior Isaiah DeLeon-Mares has been a
student assistant coach ever since he recovered from the
post-concussion syndrome that ended his football career as a
sophomore. DeLeon-Mares has taken "coaching" to a new level with
his outreach efforts for the Black Men's Union. He developed the
curriculum, prospected at local high schools and devised a plan to
recruit and train good mentors who would help area youth. "We hope
to use our position, our lives and our influence to help mold these
young men. We push them to be better in all aspects of life," said
DeLeon-Mares, who also worked on the September presidential
motorcade in New York City and got to meet President Obama.

CAPTAIN RICE

Paul Rice (Cleveland Heights, Ohio), a senior LB
who leads the team with 25 solo tackles and six TFL, is the 132nd
Yale football captain. He earned Walter Camp Yale Player of the
Game honors at Lehigh after his 40-yard run with a fake punt turned
into the game's only points. He came to Yale as a talented RB but
moved to defense when asked to his freshman year. Rice, who has 148
total career tackles and six interceptions, started at CB the last
three years before moving to LB this season. His father, Lou Rice,
played defense for Harvard.

OTHER IVY GAMES LAST WEEK

Buddy Farnham had nine catches for 207 yards and
two scores as Brown beat Cornell 34-14 last Saturday. Harvard's top
three running backs -- junior Gino Gordon, senior Cheng Ho and
freshman Treavor Scales -- combined for 31 carries for 216 yards
(6.96 yards per carry) and two touchdowns in a 37-3 win over
Princeton.

SNAP WITH SPIRAL

Senior DT Matt Kelleher (Southington, Conn.) has
handled all the long snapping with great accuracy and timing this
year. Kelleher, the former Connecticut State Player of the Year as
a QB, moved to defense his third year at Yale after injuries
prevented him from taking any offensive snaps. He was a starter on
defense last year but an injury this fall has limited him to
snapping duties.

FATHER OF FOOTBALL

For the 10th straight season, the Walter Camp
Football Foundation honors Yale's game MVP as the Walter Camp Yale
Player of the Game. This award is handed out both at home and on
the road. Walter Camp (class of 1880), commonly known as the father
of American football, captained two Yale teams and coached five
others. He compiled a 67-2-0 record and won three national titles
as coach. Senior RB Jordan Farrell (Orland Park, Ill.) earned the
first award in 2009 with a 5.4 average per carry and two scores at
Georgetown. Week No. 2 went to senior PK/P Tom Mante (Westford,
Mass.), who tied the Yale record with a 54-yard FG and punted a
Yale record 12 times with six inside the Cornell 20-yard line. Week
three and four went to QB Brook Hart (State College, Pa.), who came
off the bench to complete 13 of 17 passes against Lafayette before
throwing for 390 yards in his first start of 2009 against
Dartmouth. Captain Paul Rice (Cleveland Heights, Ohio) earned the
honor at Lehigh with the game-winning TD and five tackles. Tim
Handlon (Valparaiso, Ind.) made 11 total tackles, forced a fumble
and broke up a pass to get the nod at Penn.

SUNDAY BULLDOGS

Eight former Yale football players are working
in the game this fall, either in the college or pro ranks. Mike
McCaskey '65, chairman of the Chicago Bears, Oakland assistant Don
Martin '71, Buffalo head coach Dick Jauron '73, Bob Wallace '78
(Executive V.P. and General Council, St. Louis Rams) and New
England assistant coach Pat Graham '01 are the Bulldogs in the NFL.
Bob Shoop '88, defensive coordinator at William & Mary,
Merchant Marine Academy offensive coordinator Kyle Metzler '02 and
Bobby Abare '09, linebackers coach at Wagner, work at colleges.

H-BACK AND A TIGHT END

Six-foot-2, 235-pound senior John Sheffield
(Portland, Ore.) leads the team with 36 catches and 340 yards and
is 22nd in the nation with six grabs per game. Sheffield can be
found in the backfield, in the slot, next to a tackle on the line
or split out wide. He has often been referred to as an H-Back
(don't confuse it with HB for halfback), also known as a power
back, which is a hybrid combining the TE and FB positions.
Sheffield has 101 career catches (6th at Yale), while his one
rushing attempt was a lateral pass that turned into a seven-yard TD
against Penn in 2008.

BULLDOGS LOVE BOWL

Yale is 364-192-26 overall in 582 games played
at the Bowl. The Elis are 124-74-4 in Ivy games. Yale has had seven
perfect and 11 undefeated seasons in the Bowl since it opened in
1914.

HAWAIIAN FRIDAYS

Three members of the Yale coaching staff have
ties to Hawaii, and Tom Williams has instituted Hawaiain Fridays in
the football office. Any staffers caught without a Hawaiian style
shirt on a Friday on the third floor of Ray Tompkins House is
subject to a one dollar fine. Sophomore OL Gabriel Fernandez
(Honolulu) is the first Yale football player from Hawaii in 10
years. WR Jimmy Bennett '00 (Honolulu), who played on the 1999 Ivy
League championship squad, was the last Eli from the 50th state.

BROTHER YALE

Seven current Bulldogs have brothers who play or
played Yale football. Current Yale football brother combinations
include junior OLB Sean and freshman QB Scott Williams (Portland,
Ore.) and junior DB Marcus and senior OLB Jack Wallace (Germantown,
Wis.).

COUNTRY BOY WITH GIFT OF GAB

Can you picture a 290-pound guy in bib overalls
running an auction? If you could, it might be freshman OL Jeff
Marrs (Garden Prairie, Ill.), who grew up on a farm of about 2,000
acres near Rockford, Ill. Marrs, his brother and grandfather are
all auctioneers. The 6-foot-3, 290-pound former all-state lineman
is part of a young offensive line.

SCOTT ON PATH

Yale senior RB Brandon Scott (Chatsworth,
Calif.), a biomedical engineering major, has enjoyed his first
varsity snaps this fall with five carries for 17 yards. Scott has
also enjoyed working on his career over the summer. This past break
he worked at a drug delivery research lab that specialized in
researching anti-cancer drugs.

OFFICER AND GENTLEMAN

Junior LB Jesse Reising (Decatur, Ill.), who has
been out with an injury in recent weeks, took part in officer
candidate school with the U.S. Marine Corps last summer and plans
to join the marines after graduation. He lost 20 pounds during the
grueling training. Reising, who played in all 10 games last fall,
was class valedictorian at Eisenhower High School.

ELI VOTE

A survey of this fall's squad revealed
interesting character traits. Here are the results of the player
voting:

The Yale junior varsity plays Bridgton Academy
on Sunday, Nov. 1, at 1 p.m. at Clint Frank Field before finishing
against Harvard on Nov. 20 at home.

YALE ON TV

Eight Yale football games will air live on TV
this fall, including four of five home games. Yale on YES is back
for a second season with three straight Ivy League games (Columbia,
Brown, Princeton) on the network of the New York Yankees. The YES
Network, available nationally on DirecTV, Verizon's FiOS service
and on select cable systems, is the country's No. 1 regional sports
network. Two contests (Cornell, Harvard) will be broadcast on
Versus, the national cable home of the National Hockey League that
is in more than 73 million homes. Other Yale games aired in 2009
include Penn (Comcast), Lafayette (RCN) and Lehigh (Service
Electric 2).

CAMPING OUT

The Bulldogs have begun a tradition befitting
the school responsible for shaping the game of football. Prior to
every home game, Coach Williams gathers the team under the Walter
Camp Field Memorial to remind the Bulldogs of their proud heritage
before they walk with the Yale Band and Bulldog fans to the Bowl.
Walter Camp '1880, who coached the Blue (67-2) for five seasons and
was instrumental in shaping the rules as we know them, is commonly
referred to as the father of American football.

WELI RADIO

NEWS/Talk 960 WELI broadcasts all Yale football
games on AM (960) and online at weli.com. Yale football coaching
legend Carm Cozza, a 2003 College Football Hall of Fame inductee,
is in his 12th season as the color commentator for WELI broadcasts.
Ron Vaccaro '04 returns for his fourth year as play-by-play
announcer. Vaccaro is a two-time Emmy Award winner for his work
with NBC Olympics, his primary employer since 2004. His on-air
resume also includes the 2008 Beijing Olympics for NBC and the 2009
World Swimming Championships for Universal Sports. Sideline
reporter Alex Goldberger '08, engineer Tom Ivanovich and spotter
Kevin Guarino add the finishing touches to the broadcasts.

3RD QUARTER

Alex Faherty '05, a four-time letterman tight
end for the Bulldogs, will join Carm Cozza and Ron Vaccaro in the
WELI radio booth for the third quarter this Saturday at Columbia.
John Pagliaro '77 (Georgetown), Greg Burkus '83 (Cornell), Will
Conroy '04 (Lafayette), Tom Doyle '75 (Dartmouth), Chandler Henley
'06 (Lehigh) and Stephen Schmalhofer '08 (Penn) have all been guest
commentators this fall.

YALE-BROWN VIDEO STREAM

Fans outside the footprint of YES Network can
see a live stream of the Yale-Brown game at Yale Bowl on Nov. 7 on
yalebulldogs.com. The stream includes audio from WELI's broadcast.

WYBC RADIO

WYBC (AM 1340) also covers each game. WFAN Radio
personality Bob Heussler, WYBC's Director of Football Radio
Broadcasts, and Anthony Brooks '03 MM, the station's sports
coordinator, lead a talented group of Yale students who can also be
heard on wybc.com. Yale football is also included in WYBC's Monday
night sports lineup from Lansdowne Bar & Grill (179 Crown
Street). At 8 pm, Tom Williams, the Joel E. Smilow '54 Head Coach
of Yale Football, makes a weekly appearance on "Yale Sports
Monday."

BULLDOGS AT YORKSIDE

Yale coaches and athletes will frequent Yorkside
Restaurant (York Street, New Haven) Monday nights from 8-9 for WYBC
Radio's sports lineup. At 8, Tom Williams, the Joel E. Smilow
‘54 Head Coach of Yale Football, makes a weekly appearance on
"Yale Sports Monday" with Anthony Brooks'03 MM and Sam Purdy
‘10. Athletes and coaches from all sports, including
football, will be interviewed each week on "Yale Sports Monday"
from 8-9.

TEAMLINE

Another way to listen to Yale games live is by
calling TEAMLINE at 800.846.4700 and using Yale's code 5682.

BULLDOGS AT BOOKSTORE

The Dick Galiette/Yale Football Press Conference
has moved from the Course at Yale back to campus with the first
edition on Sept. 15. The new location is the Yale Bookstore, which
will host this event for 10 Tuesdays at 2 p.m. Coach Williams and a
selection of players will take part in the press conferences that
are streamed live by Sportingnewsct.com. They will take place on
the second floor where all the book signings are done. The press
conferences are open to the public, but questions for Williams and
his players are limited to the working media. The Yale Bookstore is
also the sponsor of the Yale Sports Hotline (203.432.YALE), where
Yale fans get game-day scores without going to their computers.

NETCASTS/PODCASTS

Ron Vaccaro '04 hosts a series of video netcast
interviews, which will include the Yale football team and other
Yale athletics content, on yalebulldogs.com. Vaccaro also has a set
of audio netcasts featuring the team for Apple iTunes users at
itunes.yale.edu.

YORKSIDE AT BOWL

Media take note... The Yale Bowl may be in West
Haven, but the press box has a taste of New Haven with Yorkside
Pizza & Restaurant serving slices and salad on home Saturdays.
Rather than interrupting your work with a lunch at halftime, the
food is now served on its arrival before kickoff.

IVY WEEKLY TELECONFERENCES

The Ivy League will hold a weekly football
coaches' teleconference every Tuesday during the 2009 season
beginning September 15 and running through November 17. Each
teleconference will begin at 11 a.m. ET. Each coach will be
available for a seven-minute window to preview his team's upcoming
opponent and answer questions from the media. A replay of the
teleconferences will be made available on www.IvyLeagueSports.com.
The call is for working media, who can contact Steve Conn for the
pass code.

Ivy Teleconference Schedule

11:04 am Phil Estes, Brown

11:11 am Norries Wilson, Columbia

11:18 am Jim Knowles, Cornell

11:25 am Buddy Teevens, Dartmouth

11:32 am Tim Murphy, Harvard

11:39 am Al Bagnoli, Penn

11:46 am Roger Hughes, Princeton

11:53 am Tom Williams, Yale

TRUE BLUE ROSTER

The 2009 Yale football roster includes 60 high
school football captains and 41 captains of other sports. The Elis
also list 52 National Honor Society members, six student body
presidents, six valedictorians and three salutatorians.

BULLDOG HOLIDAY

Yale may be the only football team in America to
have had a state holiday decreed because of its visit. In 1929 (80
years ago this fall) when Yale visited the University of Georgia to
be its dedication opponent for the opening of Sanford Stadium, the
governor issued a proclamation making the day a legal holiday in
honor of Yale University and of the Yale men who founded the state
university in Georgia.

THE GAME IN IMAX

A documentary film titled GameDay that will
include footage from the 2009 Yale-Harvard game will appear in IMAX
3D theatres around the country later this fall. The film will
provide an all access pass to college football focusing on the
preparation, traditions, rivalries and pageantry.

100 YEARS AGO

This November the Yale/Harvard contest in the
Bowl will mark the one hundredth anniversary of the historic
National Championship Game of 1909.The 1909 Yale-Harvard game, an
8-0 Bulldogs win, featured two undefeated teams (the next matchup
of undefeated squads in The Game was in 1968). Yale won the
national championship and preserved its unbeaten, untied and
unscored on marks. Three future members of the Football Hall of
Fame suited up for the game. For Yale: fullback Ted Coy and end
John Reed Kilpatrick and for Harvard: tackle Hamilton Fish. A
reunion of family members is planned for this November's game.